4.5 Article

Exploring the Genetic Diversity among Weedy Rice Accessions Differing in Herbicide Tolerance and Allelopathic Potential

Journal

DIVERSITY-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/d14010044

Keywords

crop-improvement; population genetics; weed suppression; sustainable weed management; palmer amaranth; glyphosate

Funding

  1. Special Research Initiative Grant
  2. Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station
  3. National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Hatch project [230100]

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Increasing agricultural productivity is crucial for meeting future food demand. Weedy rice, with its wide genetic diversity, can be utilized in rice improvement programs.
Increasing agricultural productivity is indispensable to meet future food demand. Crop improvement programs rely heavily on genetic diversity. The success of weeds in the ecosystem can be attributed to genetic diversity and plasticity. Weedy rice, a major weed of rice, has diverse morphology and phenology, implying wide genetic diversity. Study was conducted to genotype weedy rice accessions (n = 54) previously phenotyped for herbicide tolerance and allelopathic potential using 30 SSR markers. Cultivated rice (CL163, REX) and allelopathic rice (RONDO, PI312777, PI338047) were also included in the study. Nei's genetic diversity among weedy rice (0.45) was found to be higher than cultivated rice (0.24) but less than allelopathic rice (0.56). The genetic relationship and population structure based on herbicide tolerance and allelopathic potential were evaluated. Herbicide-tolerant and susceptible accessions formed distinct clusters in the dendrogram, indicating their genetic variation, whereas no distinction was observed between allelopathic and non-allelopathic weedy rice accessions. Weedy rice accession B2, which was previously reported to have high allelopathy and herbicide tolerance, was genetically distinct from other weedy rice. Results from the study will help leverage weedy rice for rice improvement programs as both rice and weedy rice are closely related, thus having a low breeding barrier.

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